Suspension is by coil springs – there’s a bit of a thing in the US for lowering EV9s and they look rather good – and electronically-controlled dampers, which go firmer as you spool through drive modes that range from Eco at their most easy going, through to GT at their angriest; that one selectable via its own, vivid green, steering-wheel button.
It steers smoothly and slickly, medium weighted, just under three turns between locks, and although this is a big car it has flat sides and a slabby bonnet that’s easy to look over. All round cameras help place it easily, too, so it’s not too daunting to thread on a narrow town road; although it does fill a parking space.
As standard an EV9’s ride can get a bit busy and excitable over harsher surfaces and, while I’d want a back-to-back test to say how much difference there is, I wonder if the GT isn’t vastly less comfortable. It has a generally agreeable moochability to it, with a ride that occasionally fidgets, and with a bit of pitch at motorway speeds. I could barely tell if the ride became harsher in the keener drive modes, and I suppose any extra body control tightness could be easily cancelled out by the unsettling abilities of additional throttle urgency.
But even in its max-attack mode, the EV9 GT falls short of being what you’d call a driver’s car. There is body lean, some float over crests, but still good steering and enough going on, with subtle TVVB on corner entry to ease the car into a bend and with a more powerful rear than front motor easing the car’s line on corner exit, especially noticeable in tight corners on wet roads.